The HOA stole twelve feet of my yard with a fence.
For months, they treated it like a paperwork disagreement.
Then I put a lock where their shortcut used to be.
I live at the end of Whitmore Lane, where the subdivision pavement gives way to older lots, longer grass, and houses that were built before every backyard came with a committee.
My property is not grand, but it is mine.
Two acres and change, deep enough for a small shed, a vegetable patch, and a western boundary that runs beside the back row of Ridgemont Commons.
Ridgemont Commons arrived eight years before all this started.
Seventy homes, matching mailboxes, a small park, and an HOA that liked clean rules when the rules belonged to somebody else.
Along the east edge of that subdivision sat fourteen homes whose backyards faced my land.
Between those yards and my grass was a narrow twelve-foot strip that the original developer had drawn as a buffer on a plat.
A buffer is not magic.
A drawing is not a deed.
That strip had always been inside my legal description, but people used it as a path because the old owner let them and because I did not mind at first.
Most mornings, I would see a man walking a golden retriever through there.
Some afternoons, kids rode bikes down the strip to reach the park without taking the longer route through the subdivision.
Nobody asked, but nobody damaged anything either.
I treated it like a neighborly courtesy.
Then the HOA built a fence.
I first saw the crew from my kitchen window.
They had an auger, posts, and the confident rhythm of men who had been told they were exactly where they belonged.
I walked out before the second hole was finished.
The foreman was polite until I told him the line was wrong.
He unfolded a diagram and pointed to a red mark.
The red mark sat twelve feet east of the subdivision’s real boundary.
It sat on me.
I told him to stop work until the property line was verified.
He called his supervisor.
The supervisor called the property manager.
The property manager called me with a voice that sounded trained to soften bad news.
Her name was Sandra Vogel, and she told me the HOA had relied on the developer plat.
I told her I had relied on the deed.
She said she would bring my concern to the board.
The crew kept digging.
By the time I came back from an errand, the first panels were up.
That was when my old work life came back to me.
I had spent twenty-six years as a civil litigation paralegal.
I had watched people lose cases they could have won because they argued instead of documenting.
I had watched people win cases without raising their voices because every photograph, letter, date, and signature sat exactly where it needed to sit.
So I did not yell at the crew.
I photographed the holes, the panels, the truck, the diagram, and the distance from the old markers I already knew.
Then I called a property attorney named Dennis Hartwell.
Dennis asked one question first.
Had I ordered a recent survey?
I had not.
He told me to order one immediately and send him the deed.
The deed went to him that afternoon.
His call came back before dinner.
He said the legal description was clear.
The fence appeared to be on my property, but the survey would give us the ground truth a court could use.
The next morning, his cease-and-desist letter went to the HOA, the management company, and the fence contractor.
The contractor stopped after that.
But stopping late is not the same as stopping before harm is done.
Two hundred and forty feet of fence already stood on my land.
The HOA’s lawyer answered with a theory about the developer plat.
Dennis called it creative, which in legal language meant desperate with punctuation.
The lawyer said the buffer designation showed the area was meant for the subdivision.
Dennis answered that ownership does not move because a drawing makes somebody comfortable.
Then the HOA tried a second theory.
They said years of residents walking there had created access rights.
That was a little more serious, but not serious enough to win.
Indiana law does not hand somebody a property right because they took a shortcut for eight years.
The number mattered.
The manner of use mattered.
The missing written easement mattered most.
Still, Dennis warned me that bad arguments can be useful when a party only needs delay.
That was when I started thinking about the gate.
The survey crew came on an October morning.
I stood back while they worked.
They measured from recorded bearings and distances, checked the corners, and drove new pins where the documents said the boundary lived.
The pins landed exactly where I believed they would.
Twelve feet west of the HOA’s fence.
For a long moment, I looked at the orange caps in the grass and felt no triumph at all.
I felt relief.
Relief is quieter than victory, but it lasts longer.
Dennis filed the trespass and encroachment complaint that afternoon.
I posted the property the correct way that same week.
Signs, photographs, locations, dates, everything clean.
Then I ordered a plain metal farm gate and had it installed at the south end of my western boundary.
That spot was not random.
It was the place where the back-row shortcut met the park path.
The gate did not block the residents from their own park.
It blocked them from using my land to get there.
They still had another route inside the subdivision.
It was longer.
That was not my legal problem.
The first knock came Saturday morning.
A homeowner named Greg asked if I knew why the gate was locked.
He was not angry.
He looked like a man who had gone for a walk and found a lawsuit standing in the grass.
I explained that the path crossed my property and that the HOA had built a fence on it without permission.
Greg blinked twice.
He said nobody had told them that.
Three more residents came before lunch.
The conversations were almost identical.
Confusion first.
Then disbelief.
Then the same quiet sentence in different words.
We did not know.
That afternoon, Lawrence Hess arrived at the gate with two board members and a handful of residents behind him.
Lawrence had been president long enough to inherit the problem and proud enough to pretend he owned the answer.
He told me the gate was creating concern.
I told him the fence had created the concern.
He said residents had relied on that path for years.
I said reliance without permission is not ownership.
His face tightened.
Then he told me to open the path or the HOA would drag me through court until the land was theirs.
I had heard better threats from worse lawyers.
I reached into the folder under my arm and said the only sentence I needed.
“The deed owns this strip, not you.”
Then I handed him the folder.
The top page was the survey.
The second page was the deed.
The third page was Dennis’s first cease-and-desist letter.
The fourth page was proof that the HOA received it before the fence contractor finished the installation.
Lawrence read slowly.
The residents behind him read his face faster.
Then a man stepped forward from the back of the group.
His name was Frank Okafor, and he lived in one of the fourteen homes that had used the strip.
I knew him only as the man with the retriever.
I did not know he had practiced property and land-use law for thirty years.
Frank asked Lawrence if the board had disclosed the survey issue to the residents.
Lawrence said the matter was being handled by counsel.
Frank said that was not an answer.
That was the turn.
The fight stopped being me against the neighborhood.
It became the neighborhood asking the board what else it had not been told.
Within a week, sixty-one homeowners attended an HOA meeting that usually struggled to fill a folding table.
The fourteen back-row residents brought a written demand for immediate resolution.
Frank brought a two-page memo that explained the HOA’s exposure in language ordinary people could understand.
Sandra, the property manager, called me afterward and sounded like a woman who had just watched a match touch dry paper.
The board authorized settlement talks.
Dennis enjoyed that call more than he admitted.
For the first time, the HOA had to negotiate with the people in the room knowing the real facts.
That changed the sound of everything.
Before the gate, their lawyer wrote letters as if the dispute were some gray area between neighbors.
After the gate, the board had residents asking who approved the work, who saw the warning letter, and why dues might be spent defending a fence that should not have been built.
Sandra later told me the meeting lasted almost three hours.
The back-row homeowners were not furious because they had to walk farther.
They were furious because they had been used as cover.
The board had let them believe I was the obstacle, when the actual obstacle was an encroaching fence the board did not want to remove.
Frank’s memo made that impossible to hide.
He did not write like a man trying to win an argument.
He wrote like a retired lawyer trying to keep his neighbors from buying a worse lawsuit with their own dues.
That mattered.
People can ignore an angry landowner.
They have a harder time ignoring one of their own, especially when he is holding the statute and pointing at the invoice.
Lawrence called me the evening after that meeting.
His voice had lost the boardroom polish.
He said he had reviewed the approval file and was not satisfied with what he found.
I told him I was not interested in blame as a substitute for repair.
He said he understood.
I told him Dennis would speak for me from there.
The HOA’s lawyer no longer talked about the developer plat as if it were scripture.
He asked what resolution would look like.
Dennis told him.
Full removal of the fence at HOA expense.
Payment for the trespass.
Reimbursement of my legal costs.
A recorded boundary agreement.
And one more thing.
If the residents wanted continued pedestrian access, it would be granted only by written agreement, recorded properly, renewed annually, and acknowledged as permission from me.
Not habit.
Not assumption.
Permission.
The fence came down in sections under supervision.
A survey crew checked the line while the contractor removed posts from my ground.
I watched some of it from my side.
People may call that petty if they have never paid a lawyer to explain where their own yard begins.
I called it documentation.
The HOA paid damages for the months the fence stood on my land.
They reimbursed my legal fees.
They signed a boundary agreement that put the survey line into the record where nobody could pretend not to find it.
Then came the access agreement.
That was the part I cared about most.
The fourteen homeowners received pedestrian access across the strip, but it did not run with the land automatically forever.
It required renewal.
It prohibited the HOA or residents from changing the strip without my written consent.
It made maintenance subject to my direction.
And it required the HOA to pay me one dollar a year.
The amount was not the point.
The acknowledgment was the point.
Every year, that dollar said the same thing in the language property records understand.
This is permission, not ownership.
A boundary is not anger.
It is memory written down before people start remembering in their own favor.
After the papers were recorded, I unlocked the gate during daytime hours.
The residents use the path again now.
Greg still waves.
Frank stops by sometimes, and we talk like two men who know a clean document can calm a messy street.
Lawrence is more careful with me than he used to be.
He calls before anything happens near the line.
He also sends the contractor maps now, with the boundary marked before anyone unloads tools.
I answer because the goal was never to make enemies.
The goal was to make confusion expensive enough that nobody repeated it.
The final twist is that the gate did not end the access.
It saved it.
Without the lock, the HOA would have kept pretending the path was theirs until the next board, the next contractor, or the next buyer made the same mistake louder.
With the lock, everyone had to stop and look at the paper.
The fence is gone.
The survey pins are still there.
The deed sits in my fireproof cabinet with the settlement agreement, the recorded boundary document, and the annual access agreement.
And once a year, the HOA sends one dollar for the privilege of walking across twelve feet of land they once tried to take by mistake, pressure, and a very expensive fence.
I never framed the check.
I do keep a copy.
Documents last longer than tempers.